I've read some pieces that suggested Stalin might have been (at least part) Jewish. I think there might have even been something written about this from one of his descendants, though I can't recall what offhand.

I think after his first wife died, he married NKVD/KGB-head Lazar Kaganovich's sister. (Some suggest his first wife may have even been poisoned--possibly, in order to make the latter come true.)

His daughter also married a Kaganovich, too, if I'm not mistaken.

Of course, it's common knowledge now that Lenin (Ulyanov) and Trotsky (Bronstein) were also Jewish, as were many of the other Bolsheviks involved (e.g., Zinoviev, Apfelbaum, etc.) in the murder of the Czar, his wife, their children, and about 40 million innocent Russians (with that being a conservative estimate).

In any case, while Bolshevism (the "majority" party--with the majority being Jews) was most certainly a Jewish-inspired movement, was "Stalin" (a pseudonym--not even his real name--meaning "Steel") himself a Jew?

I think after his first wife died, he married NKVD/KGB-head Lazar Kaganovich's sister. (Some suggest his first wife may have even been poisoned--possibly, in order to make the latter come true.)

I think this is wrong.

Quote:

His daughter also married a Kaganovich, too, if I'm not mistaken.

I think yes, his daughter for some reason loved jews, but not Kaganovich. Note the reaction to this:

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Svetlana fell in love at the age of 16 with a Jewish filmmaker, Alexei Kapler (of age 40). Stalin vehemently disapproved of the romance. Later Kapler was sentenced to ten years in the labor camp of Vorkuta in Siberia, and it is speculated that the real reason was this romance.